WEEK OF PRAYER: Story of church replant includes uniting local couple in faith and marriage

By Tony Hudson

MARRERO, Louisiana –– In almost every way possible, Leon and Javon Every of Marrero, Louisiana, looked like the heads of a traditional household.

Childhood sweethearts who were still very much in love—”Through thick and thin,” Leon says, “Javon’s always been there for me”—the Everys successfully raised four kids and, as they grew old together, would proudly show everyone photos of their 14 beautiful grandkids.

The Everys were remarkably traditional in every way—but one.

It had been years since Leon and Javon Every had been to a church of any kind. But they got curious when they noticed a suddenly full parking lot at the old church just down the street from their house. “We said to each other, ‘We should go visit there,’” Javon says. “So, a couple of Sundays later, we went. And the rest is history.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

“When we first met Leon and Javon,” says Troy Gause, “they’d been together 39 years, but they’d never been married.”

Gause is a church planting missionary who first came to Marrero because of a dying congregation’s call for help. Coincidentally or not, that church’s building happened to be just around the corner from Leon and Javon Every’s house.

When God called church planting missionary Troy Gause to do something he’d never done before—help revitalize a dying church in Marrero, Louisiana—he decided to do the only thing he knew how to do. “The gospel has this uncanny aspect to it,” he says. “People get saved when you preach it. So that’s what I did. And what’s happened since then—it’s undeniable that God is in this.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

As God began answering that church’s call for help, the Everys would experience transformation they did not know they needed.

“Ames Boulevard Baptist Church had been in this community for 60-something years,” Gause says, “and at one time, they’d been really successful. But when the community started to change and they didn’t, the church dwindled down to just a few elderly members. When I first became aware of them a couple of years ago, they were probably just a few months away from closing their doors.

“But they didn’t want to leave this community without a gospel witness.”

The demise of Ames Boulevard Baptist Church is not an isolated occurrence.

“Churches all across America are dying,” says Mark Clifton, senior director of replanting at the North American Mission Board (NAMB). “Among Southern Baptists, as many as 700–800 churches cease to exist every year. And every time that happens, it makes a statement to the community, and that statement is, ‘Our God is unable to keep this church going, let alone transform your life.’

“But the reality is, God is able, and churches don’t have to die.”

In 2023, Gause and his friends joined forces with the handful of people remaining at Ames Boulevard Baptist Church, and they replanted a new work—Cross Community Church—in Ames’ Boulevard’s old facility.

“What happened next,” Gause says, “was undeniably God.”

The church’s parking lot first got Leon and Javon’s attention.

“We’d been driving by that old church for years, and nothing much ever seemed to be happening there,” Javon says. “But then one day we passed by and noticed that the parking lot was full. There were cars everywhere. We’d been wanting to get into a church. And so, we said to each other, ‘We should go visit there.’ So, a couple of Sundays later, we went. And the rest is history.”

Every year, hundreds of Southern Baptist churches close their doors for good. Not long ago, it looked like Ames Boulevard Baptist Church in Marrero, Louisiana, would be one of those. But God had other plans. (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

It’d been years since the Everys had been to a church of any kind. Still, when they visited Cross Community, they liked what they found. They treated us just like we were family,” Leon says.

“And not just that,” Javon says. “We couldn’t help but notice the diversity. There was White and Black and all different kinds of people there, and they all loved each other, and they were all learning about God together. It was beautiful, and we really connected with that.”

Leon and Javon went that first Sunday, and then they went back the next Sunday, and the next Sunday. Pretty soon, they were faithful, never-miss-a-worship-service attendees—even when, after getting to know them better, Gause and his wife, Chanel, asked about their non-traditional living arrangements.

“They were like, ‘Why aren’t you married?’” Leon says. “And I was like, ‘I don’t know. I guess we just got so busy trying to make ends meet that we never got around to it.'”

Leon and Javon Every never thought they’d be the kind of people who’d be in church every time the doors opened. But then church planting missionary Troy Gause replanted a new work in the old Baptist church building located just down the street from their house. “Seven of our grandkids ended up getting saved and baptized here,” Javon says. “Now, we’re here worshipping every Sunday.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

For Leon and Javon, first came love, then came gospel conversations, then—finally—came marriage.

“Troy talked to us about marriage and what it symbolized, and then the church gave us a beautiful wedding,” Javon says. “Wow. That meant so much. We started bringing our family to church, and what happened next was just crazy. Seven of our grandkids got saved. Seven. Can you believe that?

“I always wanted us all to follow Jesus, and this new church—this is how it happened.”

Now, in a place where one church almost died, the Everys are an important part of a new church that is very much alive.

When Leon and Javon Every began bringing their family to the new church that’d just started in their neighborhood, seven of their grandkids gave their lives to Christ. “I always wanted us all to follow Jesus,” Javon says. “And this new church—this is how it happened.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

“I love the story of Mr. Leon and Mrs. Javon,” Gause says. “Seeing their family come to the Lord, seeing their kids and grandkids learning about Jesus, and then seeing all the other people we’ve been able to baptize since we replanted here—it says something to the community.

“It says that there’s a God who’s powerful enough to keep His church going. There’s a God who can give life. And there’s a God who isn’t finished with Marrero, Louisiana.”

The Annie Armstrong Easter Offering® provides half of NAMB’s annual budget, and 100 percent of the proceeds go to the mission field in North America. The offering is used for training, support and care for missionaries, like Troy and Chanel Gause, and for evangelism resources.


Published March 7, 2026

Tony Hudson

Tony Hudson writes for On Mission